Texarkana Gazette

Houston police unveil new crime lab after rape kit lawsuits

-

HOUSTON — The Houston Police Department has unveiled a new crime lab in a move to speed up service and shed its scandal-ridden past linked to a backlog of rape kits.

Several years ago, police and city officials started the process of untangling the lab from the department and into an independen­t agency, the Houston Forensic Science Center.

In 2014, the department transferre­d management of its crime lab to the center even though the physical lab remained in the Police Department’s downtown headquarte­rs.

Authoritie­s said the new facility was revealed earlier this week and features stateof-the-art labs, ventilatio­n systems and a consolidat­ed design, the Houston Chronicle reported.

Dr. Peter Stout, the center’s president, said the 83,000-square-foot space will serve as a model for the rest of the U.S.

“To actually address issues of a crime laboratory and fundamenta­lly change how a crime lab is run, is not easy,” Stout said.

The shift will also underscore that the center is truly independen­t, officials noted.

“It’s great to see a scientist leading scientists, instead of necessaril­y a cop leading scientists,” Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said. “But most importantl­y, that separation, I think it better positions us moving forward.”

As the center has struggled to overcome the smeared reputation of the department’s crime lab, it has also drawn criticism.

In January 2018, the lab fired an analyst who had shredded case notes from a homicide investigat­ion. An April 2017 audit showed mistakes by a crime scene investigat­or in 65 cases, including 26 homicides, which hindered those prosecutio­ns. A year prior, investigat­ors mistakenly contaminat­ed evidence in three cases.

And after a fatal January drug raid by Houston police narcotics officers, crime scene technician­s left pieces of evidence behind at the small home in Pecan Park that was the scene of the raid.

Neverthele­ss, police and criminal justice reform supporters said they believe the new lab will increase the public’s confidence in its independen­ce and overall mission.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States